Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries

Modern economic development is accompanied by the structural transformation from an agrarian to an industrial economy and occurs through a process of continuous industrial and technological upgrading. Since the 18th century, all countries that...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chandra, Vandana, Lin, Justin Yifu, Wang, Yan
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
GDP
GNP
MOV
R&D
TAX
WEB
WTO
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20120315164328
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3288
id okr-10986-3288
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ABSOLUTE POVERTY
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
AGRICULTURE
AUTOMOBILE
AUTOMOBILES
BANKING SYSTEM
BINDING CONSTRAINTS
BUSINESSES
CAPABILITIES
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL INTENSITY
CENTRAL BANK
COMMERCE
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
COMMODITY EXPORTS
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES
COMPETITIVENESS
COMPUTERS
CONSUMER GOODS
COST STRUCTURES
CREDIT RATIONING
CURRENCY
DATA LIMITATIONS
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
DIVERSIFICATION
DIVIDENDS
DOMESTIC CURRENCY
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DOMESTIC SAVINGS
DYNAMIC EMERGING MARKET
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC HISTORY
ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS
ECONOMIC STRUCTURE
ECONOMIC TRENDS
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKET COUNTRIES
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKETS
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
ENTREPRENEURIAL SKILLS
EQUIPMENT
EXPORT GROWTH
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT OPPORTUNITIES
EXPORT PROMOTION
EXPORT SHARE
EXPORT SUBSIDIES
EXPORTER
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
EXTERNALITIES
EXTREME POVERTY
FACTOR ENDOWMENTS
FINANCIAL CAPITAL
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FOREIGN CAPITAL
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN VALUE
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL EXPORTS
GLOBAL MARKET
GLOBAL MARKETS
GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS
GLOBALIZATION
GNP
GOLD STANDARD
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
GROWTH MODELS
GROWTH PATH
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GROWTH STRATEGY
INCOME
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME LEVELS
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
INDUSTRIAL BASE
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRY
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
INDUSTRIAL SECTOR
INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFORMATION COMMUNICATION
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INNOVATIONS
INSTRUMENT
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
INVESTMENT CAPITAL
INVESTMENT POLICY
JOINT STOCK COMPANIES
JOINT VENTURES
LABOR FORCE
LIBERALIZATION
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
LICENSE
LICENSES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
MANAGERIAL SKILLS
MANUFACTURING
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET FAILURES
MARKET MECHANISM
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SHARES
MATERIAL
MEDIUM TERM
MONOPOLY
MOV
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
NATIONAL INVESTMENT
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEW MARKET
NEW PRODUCT
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
NEW TECHNOLOGY
OPEN ACCESS
OPEN ECONOMIES
OUTPUT
PER CAPITA GROWTH
PER CAPITA INCOME
PER CAPITA INCOME LEVELS
PER CAPITA INCOMES
POLICY INTERVENTIONS
POLICY RESEARCH
POLICY STANCE
POLITICAL STABILITY
POOR COUNTRIES
POOR PEOPLE
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY RATE
POVERTY RATES
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRIMARY PRODUCTS
PRIVATE CAPITAL
PRIVATE SECTORS
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROTECTIONISM
PUBLIC WORKS
R&D
RADIOS
RAPID DEVELOPMENT
RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH
RAPID GROWTH
RAPID INDUSTRIALIZATION
REAL GDP
RESERVE
RESULT
RESULTS
RETAIL TRADE
RETURNS
RICH COUNTRIES
RURAL AREAS
SAVINGS
SEMICONDUCTOR
SETTLEMENT
SKILLED LABOR
SKILLED WORKERS
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
STRUCTURAL CHANGE
TAX
TAX COLLECTION
TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS
TECHNOLOGY FRONTIER
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TELEGRAPH
TRADE BARRIERS
TRADE DEFICIT
TRADE REGIME
TRADING
TRANSACTION
TRANSACTION COSTS
TRANSISTOR
TREATIES
TREATY
URBAN AREAS
VALUE ADDED
VALUE CHAIN
WAGES
WEB
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD MARKETS
WORLD TRADE
WTO
spellingShingle ABSOLUTE POVERTY
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
AGRICULTURE
AUTOMOBILE
AUTOMOBILES
BANKING SYSTEM
BINDING CONSTRAINTS
BUSINESSES
CAPABILITIES
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL INTENSITY
CENTRAL BANK
COMMERCE
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
COMMODITY EXPORTS
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES
COMPETITIVENESS
COMPUTERS
CONSUMER GOODS
COST STRUCTURES
CREDIT RATIONING
CURRENCY
DATA LIMITATIONS
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
DIVERSIFICATION
DIVIDENDS
DOMESTIC CURRENCY
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DOMESTIC SAVINGS
DYNAMIC EMERGING MARKET
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC HISTORY
ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS
ECONOMIC STRUCTURE
ECONOMIC TRENDS
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKET COUNTRIES
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKETS
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
ENTREPRENEURIAL SKILLS
EQUIPMENT
EXPORT GROWTH
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT OPPORTUNITIES
EXPORT PROMOTION
EXPORT SHARE
EXPORT SUBSIDIES
EXPORTER
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
EXTERNALITIES
EXTREME POVERTY
FACTOR ENDOWMENTS
FINANCIAL CAPITAL
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FOREIGN CAPITAL
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN VALUE
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL EXPORTS
GLOBAL MARKET
GLOBAL MARKETS
GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS
GLOBALIZATION
GNP
GOLD STANDARD
GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
GROWTH MODELS
GROWTH PATH
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GROWTH STRATEGY
INCOME
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME LEVELS
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
INDUSTRIAL BASE
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRY
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
INDUSTRIAL SECTOR
INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFORMATION COMMUNICATION
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INNOVATIONS
INSTRUMENT
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
INVESTMENT CAPITAL
INVESTMENT POLICY
JOINT STOCK COMPANIES
JOINT VENTURES
LABOR FORCE
LIBERALIZATION
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
LICENSE
LICENSES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
MANAGERIAL SKILLS
MANUFACTURING
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET FAILURES
MARKET MECHANISM
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SHARES
MATERIAL
MEDIUM TERM
MONOPOLY
MOV
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
NATIONAL INVESTMENT
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEW MARKET
NEW PRODUCT
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
NEW TECHNOLOGY
OPEN ACCESS
OPEN ECONOMIES
OUTPUT
PER CAPITA GROWTH
PER CAPITA INCOME
PER CAPITA INCOME LEVELS
PER CAPITA INCOMES
POLICY INTERVENTIONS
POLICY RESEARCH
POLICY STANCE
POLITICAL STABILITY
POOR COUNTRIES
POOR PEOPLE
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY RATE
POVERTY RATES
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRIMARY PRODUCTS
PRIVATE CAPITAL
PRIVATE SECTORS
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROTECTIONISM
PUBLIC WORKS
R&D
RADIOS
RAPID DEVELOPMENT
RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH
RAPID GROWTH
RAPID INDUSTRIALIZATION
REAL GDP
RESERVE
RESULT
RESULTS
RETAIL TRADE
RETURNS
RICH COUNTRIES
RURAL AREAS
SAVINGS
SEMICONDUCTOR
SETTLEMENT
SKILLED LABOR
SKILLED WORKERS
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
STRUCTURAL CHANGE
TAX
TAX COLLECTION
TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION
TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS
TECHNOLOGY FRONTIER
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TELEGRAPH
TRADE BARRIERS
TRADE DEFICIT
TRADE REGIME
TRADING
TRANSACTION
TRANSACTION COSTS
TRANSISTOR
TREATIES
TREATY
URBAN AREAS
VALUE ADDED
VALUE CHAIN
WAGES
WEB
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD MARKETS
WORLD TRADE
WTO
Chandra, Vandana
Lin, Justin Yifu
Wang, Yan
Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
The World Region
The World Region
East Asia
Asia
relation Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 6000
description Modern economic development is accompanied by the structural transformation from an agrarian to an industrial economy and occurs through a process of continuous industrial and technological upgrading. Since the 18th century, all countries that industrialized successfully in Europe, North America and East Asia followed their comparative advantage and leveraged the late-comer advantage to emulate the leader-follower flying geese pattern of industrial upgrading. The large dynamic emerging market countries such as China, India and Brazil are also engaged in industrial upgrading but with a critical difference. In particular, because of its sheer size, China has absorbed nearly all labor-intensive jobs and become the world s largest exporter of labor-intensive products. The current view is that China s dominance hinders poor countries from developing similar industries. The authors argue that industrial upgrading has increased wages and is causing China to graduate from labor-intensive to more capital- and technology-intensive industries. These industries will shed labor and create a huge opportunity for lower wage countries to start a phase of labor-intensive industrialization. This process, called the Leading Dragon Phenomenon, offers an unprecedented opportunity to low-income Sub-Saharan Africa where the industrial sector is underdeveloped and investment capital and entrepreneurial skills are leading constraints to manufacturing. It can seize the opportunity and resolve the constraints by attracting some of the OFDI flowing currently from China, India and Brazil into the manufacturing sectors of other developing countries. All low-income countries will compete but to catch the jobs spillover from China, the winner must implement credible economic development strategies that are consistent with its comparative advantage.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Chandra, Vandana
Lin, Justin Yifu
Wang, Yan
author_facet Chandra, Vandana
Lin, Justin Yifu
Wang, Yan
author_sort Chandra, Vandana
title Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries
title_short Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries
title_full Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries
title_fullStr Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries
title_full_unstemmed Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries
title_sort leading dragons phenomenon : new opportunities for catch-up in low-income countries
publishDate 2012
url http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20120315164328
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3288
_version_ 1764386737820270592
spelling okr-10986-32882021-04-23T14:02:08Z Leading Dragons Phenomenon : New Opportunities for Catch-Up in Low-Income Countries Chandra, Vandana Lin, Justin Yifu Wang, Yan ABSOLUTE POVERTY AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AGRICULTURE AUTOMOBILE AUTOMOBILES BANKING SYSTEM BINDING CONSTRAINTS BUSINESSES CAPABILITIES CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL INTENSITY CENTRAL BANK COMMERCE COMMODITIES COMMODITY COMMODITY EXPORTS COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES COMPETITIVENESS COMPUTERS CONSUMER GOODS COST STRUCTURES CREDIT RATIONING CURRENCY DATA LIMITATIONS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM DIVERSIFICATION DIVIDENDS DOMESTIC CURRENCY DOMESTIC MARKET DOMESTIC MARKETS DOMESTIC SAVINGS DYNAMIC EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC HISTORY ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS ECONOMIC STRUCTURE ECONOMIC TRENDS ELECTRICITY ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY EMERGING ECONOMIES EMERGING MARKET COUNTRIES EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES EMERGING MARKETS EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE ENTREPRENEURIAL SKILLS EQUIPMENT EXPORT GROWTH EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT OPPORTUNITIES EXPORT PROMOTION EXPORT SHARE EXPORT SUBSIDIES EXPORTER EXPORTERS EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES EXTREME POVERTY FACTOR ENDOWMENTS FINANCIAL CAPITAL FINANCIAL CRISIS FOREIGN CAPITAL FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN VALUE GDP GDP PER CAPITA GLOBAL ECONOMY GLOBAL EXPORTS GLOBAL MARKET GLOBAL MARKETS GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS GLOBALIZATION GNP GOLD STANDARD GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS GOVERNMENT SUPPORT GROWTH MODELS GROWTH PATH GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES GROWTH STRATEGY INCOME INCOME GROWTH INCOME LEVEL INCOME LEVELS INDIVIDUAL FIRMS INDUSTRIAL BASE INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES INDUSTRIAL COUNTRY INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION INDUSTRIAL SECTOR INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE INDUSTRIALIZATION INFORMATION COMMUNICATION INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INNOVATIONS INSTRUMENT INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS INVESTMENT CAPITAL INVESTMENT POLICY JOINT STOCK COMPANIES JOINT VENTURES LABOR FORCE LIBERALIZATION LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE LICENSE LICENSES LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES LOW-INCOME COUNTRY MANAGERIAL SKILLS MANUFACTURING MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY MARKET COMPETITION MARKET FAILURES MARKET MECHANISM MARKET SHARE MARKET SHARES MATERIAL MEDIUM TERM MONOPOLY MOV MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS NATIONAL ACCOUNTS NATIONAL INVESTMENT NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCES NEW MARKET NEW PRODUCT NEW TECHNOLOGIES NEW TECHNOLOGY OPEN ACCESS OPEN ECONOMIES OUTPUT PER CAPITA GROWTH PER CAPITA INCOME PER CAPITA INCOME LEVELS PER CAPITA INCOMES POLICY INTERVENTIONS POLICY RESEARCH POLICY STANCE POLITICAL STABILITY POOR COUNTRIES POOR PEOPLE POVERTY LINE POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION PRIMARY PRODUCTS PRIVATE CAPITAL PRIVATE SECTORS PRIVATIZATION PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROTECTIONISM PUBLIC WORKS R&D RADIOS RAPID DEVELOPMENT RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH RAPID GROWTH RAPID INDUSTRIALIZATION REAL GDP RESERVE RESULT RESULTS RETAIL TRADE RETURNS RICH COUNTRIES RURAL AREAS SAVINGS SEMICONDUCTOR SETTLEMENT SKILLED LABOR SKILLED WORKERS STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES STRUCTURAL CHANGE TAX TAX COLLECTION TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS TECHNOLOGY FRONTIER TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TELEGRAPH TRADE BARRIERS TRADE DEFICIT TRADE REGIME TRADING TRANSACTION TRANSACTION COSTS TRANSISTOR TREATIES TREATY URBAN AREAS VALUE ADDED VALUE CHAIN WAGES WEB WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS WORLD ECONOMY WORLD MARKET WORLD MARKETS WORLD TRADE WTO Modern economic development is accompanied by the structural transformation from an agrarian to an industrial economy and occurs through a process of continuous industrial and technological upgrading. Since the 18th century, all countries that industrialized successfully in Europe, North America and East Asia followed their comparative advantage and leveraged the late-comer advantage to emulate the leader-follower flying geese pattern of industrial upgrading. The large dynamic emerging market countries such as China, India and Brazil are also engaged in industrial upgrading but with a critical difference. In particular, because of its sheer size, China has absorbed nearly all labor-intensive jobs and become the world s largest exporter of labor-intensive products. The current view is that China s dominance hinders poor countries from developing similar industries. The authors argue that industrial upgrading has increased wages and is causing China to graduate from labor-intensive to more capital- and technology-intensive industries. These industries will shed labor and create a huge opportunity for lower wage countries to start a phase of labor-intensive industrialization. This process, called the Leading Dragon Phenomenon, offers an unprecedented opportunity to low-income Sub-Saharan Africa where the industrial sector is underdeveloped and investment capital and entrepreneurial skills are leading constraints to manufacturing. It can seize the opportunity and resolve the constraints by attracting some of the OFDI flowing currently from China, India and Brazil into the manufacturing sectors of other developing countries. All low-income countries will compete but to catch the jobs spillover from China, the winner must implement credible economic development strategies that are consistent with its comparative advantage. 2012-03-19T17:29:47Z 2012-03-19T17:29:47Z 2012-03-01 http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20120315164328 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3288 English Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 6000 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper East Asia and Pacific The World Region The World Region East Asia Asia